Hannah and Her Sisters (1986): Love, Faith, and the Art of Endurance
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About this listen
In this episode, we explore Woody Allen’s Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) — a film that blends intimacy, philosophy, and quiet emotional upheaval into one of the most accomplished American dramas of the 1980s.
Structured between two Thanksgiving gatherings, the film traces the shifting dynamics of family, marriage, desire, insecurity, and spiritual anxiety. Beneath its warmth lies a profound inquiry into betrayal, existential doubt, artistic struggle, and the fragile search for meaning. From Elliot’s romantic dissatisfaction and Lee’s uneasy independence, to Holly’s creative paralysis and Mickey’s panic over mortality, the film unfolds as a mosaic of intersecting lives.
In this episode, we examine Allen’s formal restraint, his use of ensemble storytelling, and the film’s delicate balance
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